Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Disqualifi­cation of Pilot, 18 others sought by Cong

- Saubhadra Chatterji

‘PILOT’S CONDUCT, STATEMENTS BY HIS CLOSE AIDES AND HIS ABSENCE FROM TWO MEETINGS OF THE CLP TOGETHER MAKE A STRONG CASE FOR HIS DISQUALIFI­CATION’

NEW DELHI : The Congress’ chief whip in the Rajasthan assembly Mahesh Joshi wrote to speaker CP Joshi seeking the disqualifi­cation of former deputy chief minister Sachin Pilot and 18 members of the legislativ­e assembly under the provisions of the 10th Schedule of the Constituti­on (popularly known as the anti-defection law).

But it emerges that the party may have taken an expansive view of the anti-defection law.

While Joshi confirmed to news agency PTI that disqualifi­cation proceeding­s have begun with notices being issued to the 19 legislator­s, efforts continued to convince Pilot, who reiterated on Wednesday that he doesn’t plan to join the Bharatiya Janata Party, to return to the fold -- although HT learns that chief minister Ashok Gehlot is keen to disqualify Pilot.

Congress leaders involved in the strategy said on condition of anonymity that Pilot’s conduct, statements by his close aides and his absence from two meetings of the Congress legislatur­e party in Rajasthan together make a strong case for his disqualifi­cation.

Some constituti­onal experts say Pilot may take the legal route to respond to the disqualifi­cation notice and even seek the removal of CP Joshi as the speaker on the ground of partial conduct to gain more time. The disqualifi­cation of the 19 will reduce the effective strength of the House to 181, with a majority mark of 91, well below the 104 legislator­s Gehlot whose support Gehlot confirmed to the state’s governor on Tuesday.

The 10th Schedule says that a lawmaker can be disqualifi­ed from the House “if he has voluntaril­y given up his membership of such political party” or “if he votes or abstains from voting in such House contrary to any direction issued by the political party to which he belongs or by any person or authority authorised by it in this behalf without obtaining prior permission of such political party.”

Two of the Congress leaders cited above argued that the law can be extended to behaviour outside the House. “An elected lawmaker’s conduct, his speeches, his hobnobbing with rivals too can be counted as grounds for disqualifi­cation,” said one of them.

“He skipped two meetings of Congress legislatur­e party, his loyalists gave three interviews demanding trust vote are proof of his intention. There are several examples how Supreme Court considered such issues in the Ravi Naik and the BS Yediyurapp­a cases,” said the second leader. The BS Yediyurapp­a case related to the defection of Congress and Janata Dal (Secular) MLAS in Karnataka in July 2019 that resulted in the ouster of a coalition government headed by the two parties last year, paving the way for the BJP’S Yediyurapp­a to become CM. The court, while adjudicati­ng on a petition challengin­g the disqualifi­cation of the 17 MLAS by the speaker on the grounds that they had “voluntaril­y given up their membership of the party, through their undisputed conduct”, partly upheld the presiding officer’s decision.

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